A tweet by an angry Toronto Blue Jays fan earned him a knock on the door from the local police.

According to CBC News, Nicholas Kharshoum, 24, of Kitchener, Ontario, was given a verbal warning but not charged when the Waterloo Regional Police department visited his house this weekend on behalf of Toronto police.

In February, Kharshoum sent out a tweet expressing some frustration over the Blue Jays not coming to an agreement on a contract extension with slugger Jose Bautista.

“(Expletive) pay the man or I”m throwing the Ted Rogers statue in the harbor you pieces of (expletive),” the tweet, from the account @Torontohooligan, read.

The late Ted Rogers was the former CEO of Rogers Communications and the team”s owner from 2000 until his death in 2008. A statue of his likeness was erected outside the team”s stadium, the Rogers Centre, in 2013 and has never exactly been warmly welcomed considering there are no similar tributes to any great players in Blue Jays history.

According to CBC, the Rogers Centre security alerted authorities about the tweeted threat and the cyber crimes unit went about locating Kharshoum.

“I can see how it was taken legitimately, but I definitely don”t think it should have been,” Kharshoum told CBC.

Kharshoum conceded he”ll be more careful about his tweets in the future even if he thought this treatment was “over the top.”